"Not only are we seeing these incidents increase in number and frequency, we're also seeing them occur on increasingly eastern areas of the landscape."

Morehouse and her colleagues went through more than 6,300 provincial government documents that recorded human contact with grizzlies, black bears, wolves and cougars from 1999 to 2014. That contact ranged from a distant sighting to a dangerous or destructive encounter.

They found little change in the contact with black bears, wolves and cougars.

Contacts quadrupled

But grizzlies recorded a dramatic increase. The number of contacts went from fewer than 50 to about 200.

Yet land use in the area has been consistent and the human population is stable or decreasing.

"We eliminated human population increase and changes in demographics as the main reasons behind increasing carnivore conflicts," the report says.

One reason for the growth could be the elimination of the spring grizzly hunt in 2006. After that date, farmers and ranchers could no longer simply kill a grizzly they believed was harming their operations.

Producers may now be calling in about bears they would have previously dealt with on their own, suggested Morehouse. As well, people who aren't used to seeing bears may also be more likely to report them.

"We might expect those people are going to call more frequently as opposed to people who are used to living with bears."

Increase in population

Or there may simply be more bears. Morehouse has previously published research that suggested grizzly populations in the area were increasing at about three per cent a year.

The latest study found grain bins — full of tasty carbohydrates — are a major site for bear-human encounters.

"Bears can peel off the doors on those grain bins," Morehouse said. "It's like they're opening a sardine can."

Some farmers have installed electric fencing around their bins or put bear-proof doors on them. Bear-proof bins are also available for dead animals that might otherwise attract predators.

Producers can also get reimbursed for the cost of a visit from a rendering truck to deal with carcasses.

Airlifting carcasses

Morehouse found that one government program definitely didn't work. The province used to airlift roadkill carcasses to bear dens in the spring hoping that would keep the hungry bruins in the high country.

Morehouse concluded there was no evidence it did so after examining 22 bears that used the feeding sites provided by the province. Her research showed that only two of those bears showed up in a spring conflict.

"That might suggest to us the program is effective for those 22 bears. But in the absence of the program, we didn't see all of a sudden those 22 bears showing up in spring conflict sites," she told the Calgary Eyeopener.

"And the other component is that there are other bears that are not using these intercept feeding sites that are going to the lower elevation areas and they are causing conflicts."

She also said the sites are used primarily by males grizzlies.

Living with grizzlies

However, most people in the region are keen to keep living with large predators, said Morehouse.